2018-11-22

(46) Simone Chun - 비나 오나 눈이 오나 365일 코리아 업데이트^^ 부업으로 함 ㅎㅎ. 이거 자꾸 하다 보니...

(46) Simone Chun - 비나 오나 눈이 오나 365일 코리아 업데이트^^ 부업으로 함 ㅎㅎ. 이거 자꾸 하다 보니...









Simone Chun
6 hrs ·



비나 오나 눈이 오나 365일 코리아 업데이트^^
부업으로 함 ㅎㅎ.
이거 자꾸 하다 보니 정말로 끝장을 보아야 겠다는 생각이 든다.
우리 세대 남북 통일 해 버리자!

Korea Update 69. “Remarkable changes are taking place on the Korean peninsula” 경이로운 일들이 한반도에서 일어나고 있다.

Move forward without stopping. Do not be afraid.
Pope Francis to President Moon Jae-in

World War I ended 100 years ago, but the 65-year-old war on the Korean Peninsula lives on to this day. The end of a war marks the start of a path to peace and prosperity. We will never stop or give up our journey toward peace. The Office of President Moon Jae-in

Dear Friend—an update. Please help us!
The Korean War (1950-53)
More than 33,000 American troops were killed
More than 100,000 Americans were wounded
North Korea lost 30 percent of its population due to 37 month-long US led bombings
Current economic sanctions on North Korea: another form of war against 25 million people in North Korea. An estimated 10.3 million people across DPRK suffer from food insecurity and undernutrition, as well as a lack of access to basic services. 60,000 North Korean children are at risk of severe acute malnourishment due to starvations

“Another war in Korea would be hell”
A Pentagon war scenario estimated 20,000 casualties in South Korea each day in a conventional war. According to a Congressional Research Service report, as many as 300,000 people could perish in just the first few days of war
Another war in the Korean peninsula will be quickly escalated into a world war, including nuclear weapons
Research shows that if the 'unthinkable'--a nuclear war with North Korea--happened, 8 million people could die in a nuclear war. While the United States that has some 1,400 nuclear warheads ready to fire and another 2,600 that could be quickly deployed to North Korea, American troops would die in large numbers alongside South Korean forces and masses of innocent civilians

“Remarkable changes are taking place on the Korean peninsula”
1. A Report Card, 200 days after The Panmunjom Declaration (in Korean)
32% done!
53% in progress!
http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/politics/defense/869818.html

2. The Singapore summit
1. The United States and the DPRK commit to establish new U.S.-DPRK relations in accordance with the desire of the peoples of the two countries for peace and prosperity.
2. The United States and the DPRK will join their efforts to build a lasting and stable peace regime on the Korean Peninsula.
3. Reaffirming the April 27, 2018 Panmunjom Declaration, the DPRK commits to work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.
4. The United States and the DPRK commit to recovering POW/MIA remains, including the immediate repatriation of those already identified.

3. U.S. commander supports inter-Korean military deal on reducing tension
The commander of United States Forces Korea (USFK) said Sunday he supports an inter-Korean military agreement on reducing tension. Gen. Robert B. Abrams, who took command as head of U.S. troops here last week, made the remarks as he visited the truce village of Panmunjom inside the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing the Korean Peninsula.
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/…/0200000000AEN201811110049…

4. South Korea dismantles guard posts with dynamite. AP
The Koreas each agreed to dismantle or disarm 11 of their guard posts by the end of this month before jointly verifying the destruction next month. South Korea had about 60 posts inside the DMZ guarded by layers of barbed wire and manned by troops with machine guns.
https://www.apnews.com/275c42a122fd4ed0b18392e624eae56e

5. Carter commends peace efforts for Korea. UM News
North Korea wants to become part of the community of nations, he pointed out. If the U.S. can undertake this step-by-step process, which it has not been willing to do in the past, Carter said it could mean an end to the war. And he said that could “lead to a complete denuclearization in North Korea and hopefully the entire Korean Peninsula.” A panel of speakers also reflected on the presentations by Carter and Laney and offered perspectives based on their own experiences and Christian viewpoints. Christine Ahn, founder and international coordinator of Women Cross DMZ, talked about how political rhetoric stymies progress toward peace. “But a peace agreement could defuse tensions while serving as a security guarantee, as Laney and Carter both noted this morning,” she said. “It is our ethical and moral responsibility to bring a closure to this war,” she told the gathering.
https://www.umnews.org/…/carter-commends-peace-efforts-for-…

6. REUTERS. Summit bears fruit as South Korea flies tangerines to North
The Jeju tangerines were packed in 20,000 boxes and will be flown to Pyongyang by four C-130 aircraft during multiple flights on Sunday and Monday, the Blue House said in a statement.
https://www.reuters.com/…/summit-bears-fruit-as-south-korea…

7. E. Tammy Kim. Covering the Koreas. How misleading a culture changes story. Columbia Journalism Review
Ordinary S. Koreans care more about peace than uranium counts, but to a disquieting extent, their media outlets and politicians pay close attention to what Americans say… “The joint statement signed by Kim and Trump was pithy, and thus interpreted a million different ways. What was the meaning of “complete denuclearization”? South Korean newspapers...were upbeat: “Beyond Cold War wall, holding out hands of peace,” The Seoul Shinmum proclaimed. “From Seven Decades of Animosity Toward Peace,” read the left-leaning Hankyoreh. It was the start of a “great journey toward peace,” according to The Kookmin Daily. The American press remained largely skeptical, if not hostile. Media Twitter, left and right, dismissed the summit as vapid, Trumpian showboating.”
https://www.cjr.org/special…/covering-north-south-korea.php/

8. Tim Shorrock. The Nation. How The New York Times Deceived the Public on North Korea
Stretching the findings of a think-tank report on Pyongyang’s missile bases is a reminder of the paper’s role in the lead-up to the Iraq War.
Like many of his North Korea stories over the years, Sanger’s account of what he basically described as a betrayal by Kim Jong-un perfectly timed to interject public skepticism of the North at a crucial moment for the US negotiations with both Koreas to resolve the nuclear standoff and pave the way for a final peace settlement on the Korean Peninsula.
https://www.thenation.com/…/how-the-new-york-times-deceive…/
가짜 연구, 가짜 뉴스로 한반도 전쟁 위기 고조하는 #국제전략문제연구소 트위트. 전혀 반성을 않고 거의 매일 가짜 뉴스 트위트. 뉴욕타임지 기자는 북한 관련 편파적인 기사를 90년대 부터 오랫동안 쓴 사람.빅터 차 한국계 미국인은 북한 레짐 체인지 네오콘파. 저런자들이 한반도 평화 적폐 세력.
https://twitter.com/SimoneChun/status/1064219014040215553

9. Leon V. Sigal. The New York Times’ Misleading Story on North Korean Missiles
That is the ominous lede of a story by David Sanger and William Broad in The New York Times on Monday, November 12. Substituting tendentious hyperbole for sound reporting may convince editors to feature a story on page one, but it is a disservice to readers. The United States and North Korea have yet to conclude an agreement that inhibits deployment of missiles by Pyongyang, never mind requiring their dismantlement. Nor has Washington yet offered the necessary reciprocal steps that might make such a deal possible. A negotiated suspension of missile deployment and production should follow a halt to fissile material production and take precedence in talks over a complete declaration of North Korea’s inventory of nuclear and missile assets.
https://www.38north.org/2018/11/lsigal111318/
http://www.hani.co.kr/…/i…/international_general/870172.html

10. John Feffer. Is Korea’s Cold War About to End? Foreign Policy in Focus
The two Koreas are actually starting to demilitarize the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)...Journalists are missing the real news of the two Koreas dismantling Cold War structures on the peninsula in favor of information that reinforces the narrative that North Korea is ultimately untrustworthy....By the time journalists have figured everything out what’s going on, perhaps the two Koreas will have managed to end the Cold War, not just rhetorically but physically — and without getting permission from their patrons...Koreans themselves can continue to change the facts on the ground — step by step, without international fanfare — in such a way that outsiders will have to follow the Korean lead rather than the other way around.

The Korea Peace Network
Please sign and circulate widely:
Ahead of the second U.S.-North Korea summit, the statement--initiated by Korean American leaders nationwide and the Korea Peace Network--calls on the United States government to:
- Declare an end to the Korean War
- Replace the 1953 Armistice with a Peace Treaty;
- Lift sanctions that harm the most vulnerable; and
- Establish normal relations with the DPRK

Who can sign: US civil society organizations and individuals
To sign on:
English: https://sites.google.com/view/peachtreatynow2nd
Korean: https://docs.google.com/…/12QmWOk5jg2anm9efSarjZm…/viewform…


HANI.CO.KR

판문점 선언 200일…남북합의 이행, 어디까지 왔나
정치BAR_노지원의 진토닉_2018 남북합의 중간점검

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